balazska

🇩🇪 Latest fuel prices from Germany❗️
2.5 euros – that is about 1,000 forints per liter for regular diesel and 95-octane petrol!

☝️ Meanwhile, Bild conducted a survey, and the results are quite telling.

They reveal a lot about how dissatisfied German voters—who are kept on a short leash by the liberal media—have already become with the clumsy performance of the Friedrich Merz–led grand coalition ❗️

📍 Do you think the German government is doing enough to reduce fuel prices?
👉 75% NO ❌

📍 Do you think taxes on fuel should be reduced in Germany?
👉 76% YES ✅

📍 Do you think oil companies’ excess profits should be taken away in a situation like this?
👉 68% YES ✅

🇩🇪 The German political elite is desperately clinging to power, even though it has long since failed.
Moreover, they are dragging not only Germany but all of Europe toward the brink…

☝️ The “achievements” of the past 10 years:

  • they let migrants in,
  • by banning nuclear energy and then Russian energy, they are destroying the economy,
  • with war plans they are taking away the future of the young,
  • and they are unable to handle the crises of this dangerous era.

❗️That is why we must continue along the Hungarian path, and not align ourselves with the Berlin–Brussels dictates, as the Tisza Party would do.

P.S.: 🇭🇺 I received the photo from a Hungarian man living in Germany who was on his way home yesterday to the Peace March. ✌️🇭🇺👍

1️⃣ Selective framing of reality (selective framing)

Excerpt
“Fresh fuel prices from Germany: €2.5 per liter.”

Technique
The communication highlights a single striking data point (high fuel price), but does not provide full context.

For example, the following factors are omitted:

  • global oil market dynamics
  • geopolitical conflicts
  • differences in tax structures
  • the European energy transition
  • exchange-rate effects

Goal

➡️ to attribute high prices to a single political cause.

Effect

The reader may develop the impression that:

“the German government is responsible for everything.”


2️⃣ External blame (scapegoating)

Excerpt
“German voters kept on a short leash by the liberal media.”

Technique

The communication constructs an enemy image:

  • “liberal media”
  • “Berlin elite”

This is a classic form of political scapegoating.

Goal

➡️ simplify complex economic processes
➡️ blame a political opponent

Effect

The reader may more easily accept a simplified explanation:

“everything is the elite’s fault.”


3️⃣ Appeal to public opinion (bandwagon framing)

Excerpt

“75% no”
“76% yes”
“68% yes”

Technique

The text suggests that:

➡️ the majority has already decided what the correct position is.

This is the classic bandwagon effect.

Goal

to influence undecided readers.

Effect

The reader may feel:

“If most people think this way, it must be true.”


4️⃣ Construction of a crisis narrative (crisis framing)

Excerpt

“They are leading all of Germany — and even all of Europe — toward the abyss.”

Technique

The communication uses dramatic language.

Key words:

  • “abyss”
  • “crisis”
  • “incompetence”

Goal

➡️ dramatize the political situation
➡️ suggest an urgent need for change.


5️⃣ Simplified cause-and-effect narrative (causal oversimplification)

Excerpt

“Banning nuclear energy and Russian energy is destroying the economy.”

Technique

A very complex economic issue is reduced to a single cause.

In reality, energy prices are influenced by many factors, including:

  • global oil prices
  • the LNG market
  • geopolitics
  • inflation
  • taxes
  • exchange rates

Goal

➡️ create a simple and easily understandable political narrative.


6️⃣ Construction of a national alternative (national path framing)

Excerpt

“This is why we must continue on the Hungarian path.”

Technique

The communication divides the world into two camps:

  • the “Hungarian path”
  • “Brussels diktats”

This is binary political framing.

Goal

➡️ turn political choice into a matter of identity.


7️⃣ Strengthening the appearance of authenticity (authenticity framing)

Excerpt

“I received the photo from a Hungarian man living in Germany.”

Technique

Mentioning a personal source suggests:

➡️ “real, spontaneous information.”

This is a common communication device in social media.


Factors omitted from the narrative (as you pointed out)

The text does not mention the global oil market, for example:

  • Middle Eastern conflicts
  • oil shipping routes
  • geopolitical tensions
  • OPEC policy
  • the dollar–oil relationship

From a communication perspective, this is known as:

agenda setting + omission

In other words:

➡️ what is left out is also part of the message.

When certain factors are not mentioned, readers are more likely to accept a simplified political explanation.


Summary

The text uses several classic political communication techniques:

  • selective framing
  • scapegoating
  • bandwagon effect
  • crisis narrative
  • simplified cause-and-effect reasoning
  • national alternative framing
  • authenticity signaling

The core mechanism of the communication:

➡️ turning a complex economic phenomenon into a simple political story.